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BIRTH-PRESCHOOL
--Teaching Reading To Your Preschooler
--Becoming a Reader
--Talking and Listening
--Reading Together
--Learning about Print and Books
--How To Choose Books For Your Preschooler
--Preschooler Reading List/Booklist
--Preschooler Reading List/Booklist 2
--Reading Tips For Reading With A Toddler
--Early Efforts to Write
--Reading in Another Language

READING ACTIVITIES: Birth-Preschool
--Baby Talk
--Books and Babies


Importance of Reading Skills Articles
--Importance of Early Reading
--Importance of Summer Reading
--Importance of Critical Reading


Stages Of The Reading Process
--Early Reading Programs 1
--Early Reading Programs 2
--Best Practices For Teaching Early Reading Skills


Tips For Teaching Reading Decoding Skills

Recommended Home School Remedial Reading Program

AOP! The Ultimate Homeschool Experience!



 

Part 1: Birth Through Preschool Reading Skills

  • Introducing Print And Books To Your Preschooler


Reading together is a perfect time to help a late toddler or early preschooler learn what books are.

As you read aloud, stop now and then and point to letters and words; then point to the pictures they stand
for.

Your child will begin to understand that the letters form words and that words name pictures.

He will also start to learn that each letter has its own sound—one of the most important things your child
can know when learning to read.

By the time children are 4, most have begun to understand that printed words have meaning.

By age 5, most will begin to know that not just the story but the printed words themselves go from left to right.

Many children will even start to identify some capital and small letters and simple words. (For some ideas on learning letters, see “As Simple as ABC,”.)

In late kindergarten or early first grade, your child may want to read on his own. Let him!

But be sure that he wants to do it. Reading should be something he is proud of and eager to do and not a lesson.

How Does a Book Work?

Children are fascinated by how books look and feel. They see how easily you handle and read books, and they want to do the same. When your toddler watches you handle books, he begins to learn that a book is
for reading, not tearing or tossing around.

Before he is 3, he may even pick one up and pretend to read, an important sign that he is beginning to know what a book is for. As your child becomes a preschooler, she is learning that:

1) A book has a front cover.
2) A book has a beginning and an end.
3) A book has pages.
4) A page in a book has a top and a bottom.
5) You turn pages one at a time to follow the story.
6) You read a story from left to right of a page.


As you read with your 4– or 5–year-old, begin to remind her about these things. Read the title on the cover. Talk about the picture on the cover. Point to the place where the story starts and, later, where it ends.

Let your child help turn the pages. When you start a new page, point to where the words of the story continue and keep following the words by moving your finger beneath them.

It takes time for a child to learn these things, but when your child does learn them, he has solved some of reading’s mysteries.


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*How to promote early communication and language development in your child
*How to use sign language to develop reading skills
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Related Articles:

Part 1: Birth Through Preschool Reading Skills

 

Part 2: Birth Through Preschool: Activities For Developing Reading Skills in Your Preschooler

 

You may also be interested in the following:

Testing First Grade Reading Skills

 

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